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Lewis and Regenhardt lines of Southeast Missouri and Related Families

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Gustave F. Engelbrecht

Male 1873 - 1960  (87 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Gustave F. Engelbrecht was born on 03 Mar 1873 in Drake, Gasconade County, Missouri, USA; died on 01 Apr 1960 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: LX9W-H8Y
    • Name: August
    • Created: 09 May 2015

    Notes:

    1930 Census: Lived in New Era Precint, Furnas County, Nebraska

    Find A Grave Memorial# 35945236

    Shortly after theri marriage, Gustav and Florentina moved to Nebraska, settling in the Upland area. Their first 2 children, Dorothy Marie and George Benjamin, were born there. Sometime later they moved to a farm near Macon in Franklin County, Nebraska. The next 3 children, Agnes, Gilbert, and Winifred, were born there. Later in 1917-1918, they moved to Furnas Couty, five miles west and 1/2 mile south of Oxford, Nebraska. Gustav farmed the place until they retired in 1946.

    THE REPUBLICAN RIVER FLOOD OF 1935

    On May 30, 1935, torrential rains fell in eastern Colorado and southwestern Nebraska; by early morning of the 31st, the usually peaceful Republican River was running bluff-to-bluff along its upper reaches. When the waters subsided two days later, over 100lives had been lost and many millions of dollars of damage had been done. A number of persons from this community were drowned.

    After the prolonged drouth of the early 30's, the wet spring of 1935 had brought welcome relief to the region. By the end of May, however, the soil was nearing the saturation point. The rains of May 30th, concentrated in the basin of the South Fork and extending into the valleys of the Arikaree, Frenchman, Red Willow, and Medicine, poured into the main stream--normally 300 to 400 feet wide, turning it into a raging torrent one to four miles wide.

    The flood water came as a wall, variously estimated at from three to eight feet in height. The advance of the crest was more rapid in the upper valley, reported at ten miles an hour above Trenton, at five between there and Oxford, and slowing to 2 1/2 miles an hour upon crossing over into Kansas.

    To prevent the repetition of such a tragedy the federal government has built a series of six dams, five in Nebraska, across the Republican or its tributaries, serving not only as flood protection, but providing recreation and irrigation facilities as well.

    Oxford Rotary Club
    Historical Land Mark Council
    US 136, west of Oxford
    Furnas County
    Marker 39

    [This letter is written by Gustave Engelbrecbt to his Englebrect relatives in Missouri giving the details of the loss of his son Orville’s (spelled Orvel in the letter) wife and daughter in the Republic River Flood of May 31, 1935.]
    Oxford, Nebraska
    June 3, 1935

    Dear Loved Ones:

    Now that the rescue work is over I feel I should let you know more definite about the terrible flood we had here in the Republican Valley. The worst in the history of Nebraska. It his us all pretty bad but Dorothy and her family were some of those most severely hit.
    The water came so fast that one couldn’t run out of the way of it, and it was midnight when the volley came and people were at sleep and the night was pitch dark and was raining some. When Dorothy and Orvel awoke, the water as coming into the house, they had no time to dress. Orvel waded through the water to get an axe and chop a hole in the roof; and all climbed to the roof when they got there the house swept away with them, going at a fast speed down the valley towards the river. In a little while the house hit something and went to pieces, and they went on with part of the roof. Soon they hit a tree at the river and were thrown into the river.
    Orvel is a good swimmer, he took the little boy 2 years old in one arm and swam with the other arm. He told Dorothy to hang on to him she grabbed his suspenders and that way he swam with them. Poor Willis Lou had already gotten away from them. Soon they got on some floating pieces of something and held to that till they were wiped off that. Then he had to swim again and soon they got to something else to cling to but that soon got away from them and had to swim again. Somehow Dorothy must have hit something and lost her hold on him and sank. He saw her come up twice and hollered at her with all his might but she did not answer any more and sank again when he never saw her any more. In the excitement the boy dropped away from him he grabbed for him and happened to catch him by the arm, thanks to God, otherwise he would have been gone too. Being much discouraged after losing the girl 6 years old and finally Dorothy too, after swimming a mile and a half, but for the sake of the little boy he thought he
    Lucky he soon got to safety with the boy on a small, very small sandy island, soon after Dorothy let loose of him. If she had held on for about 20 feet more she would have been saved, but at the time they did not know that for it was too dark to see anything. They got to this island at about one o’clock at night and it was pretty cold and the little fellow had nothing on anymore, his shirt was all torn off and was quite bruised. Here he had to spend 36 hours before he was rescued.
    The little fellow got so cold that he turned blue. Orvel took his overalls off and wrapped them around the boy and pressed him close to him. In the morning, Saturday, the sky was clear and the sun came out warm. But let me tell you Providence played its part here, God sure helped that little fellow. Orvel saw a little mattress floating on the water close to the shore he caught it and it was the boy’s own little mattress out of his little bed.
    Orvel cut it open and dried it. Soon came a pillow along with an extra pillow case on it. Orvel put part of the feathers in the mattress and put the other pillowcase on him cutting a hole in the top for his head and a hole on each side for his arms and then put him in the mattress when he had that done the boy looked at his dad and smiled, that done him so well that he thought his efforts were well rewarded. In all this while the boy did not cry.

    Orvel was so badly grieved over the loss of Dorothy and Willis Lou that he cried out loud for a long time. His little boy says to him, “Daddy shut up”.

    36 hours is a long time for a little boy to do without food or water so he insisted on having some of that dirty floodwater. God helped him and soon came a cup floating along Orvel caught it and filled it with that water and left it settle until the dirt was all on the bottom then he drank the water off. Then he says, “Daddy lets call Mamma to make us some thing to eat. Orvel explained to him that mamma got lost in the water and would never come back. The little fellow must have understood that he never called for mamma again.

    Not far away on another island Orvel saw a house he thought to swim over there with the boy, put him in the little pillow case and tied him on his back but the little fellow cried so bad that he had to abandon the scheme. Stayed till next morning, Sunday. Then he could wade it across to the house. The people that lived there had left everything and fled, but there was food and water in the house, so Orvel fixed a meal and it is needless to say the boy ate heartily and smiled.

    At eleven o’clock a boat came along and saw them and brought them in. Today they are both doing well, only Orvel is horrible sun—burned and the boy is very sore. This is just one story of many similar ones. Many people were rescued from trees and housetops. Several of the rescuing party were drowned. Well I guess I must relate a little of our own experience. Since we all got out alive I did not think it so important though our loss is something like $3,000.00 We did not think the water would ever come as high as we live.

    So we stayed in the house and went to bed at 11:30 a neighbor called for help the water was running in the basement. We got up and dressed in a hurry, and when we went out the water came into our yard already. We ran to see what could rescue from the basement but could do nothing the water was already running in and in a little while a minute or two the water stood a foot deep on the floor. We saw we had to flee but there too the water was so deep and too swift and none of us could swim. So we crawled outthe north window and got on the windmill tower and around the side of the tower we hung till next morning about eight o’clock, then the neighbors from the highland came and got us with horses. The water had dropped two feet or more already. This was Friday night.

    Now, Monday, we have 15 men working to clean the dirt out of the house and barn. We had 2 feet of mud in the house when the water went down. Everything in the house was full of mud. All fences, hay lumber, posts and everything that would swim went away, some of the smaller buildings went too others were moved just some distance and were hung up. All spring chickens drowned. The bigger ones and old hens were roosting high and stayed. From 40 hogs have ten left, cattle were all gone but 4 but Saturday we heard where there were 5 more. The wheat oats are ruined and grain in the bin is full of mud, have not even got seed corn left. We had no corn planted yet in the bottom. It will probably be a few weeks before we can live on the place.

    At Orville Fuchs’s place the old folks lived in a big 2 story house and had 8 occupants at the time. It swept away and all got drowned but 3. They clung to a tree. Every building on the place and everything else is gone. Orville hasn’t got anything anymore but he proved himself a brave man and a great hero and if Dorothy had just hung on to him a little bit longer he would have saved her too, but neither one knew that they were so near at safety. Nearly every house in low bottom is gone and many people are drowned. They have so far recovered 3 bodies. Dorothy and Willis Lou we have not found yet. We will search again tomorrow and pray that we may find them. We would feel so much better if we could find them.

    Now Amanda will you please let Joe and Obergs read this letter for I just haven’t the time to write to every body and then send it to Bill and to Sister Emma. I would like so much to write to everyone but I just can’t find time we have so terrible much todo. Dear loved ones please forgive me, I am just all concerned in finding back my dear daughter and granddaughter meanwhile we will trust and pray and cast our burdens upon him who said, “Call upon me in the days of trouble and I will deliver thee I willwrite again as soon as I can. Wife is bearing up good and so are the rest, with the help of God.

    Your loving ones,
    Tena and I and the rest of the family

    Note: After talking with Winnifred Watson I found out that the wife’s body was never recovered after the flood. Willis Lou’s body was found by a farmer who was tending to his fields and saw her little arm sticking up out of the ground where the floodwaters had receded.




    http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/31045190/person/12355302038

    Gustave married Florentina Katerina Austermann on 12 Feb 1902 in Drake, Gasconade County, Missouri, USA. Florentina was born on 26 Apr 1877; died on 28 Oct 1953; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Dorothy Marie Engelbrecht  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Dec 1902 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA; died on 31 May 1935 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.
    2. 3. George Benjamin Engelbrecht  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 05 Jun 1904 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA.
    3. 4. Agnes Wilhelmina Engelbrecht  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Feb 1908; died on 28 Dec 1966; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.
    4. 5. Gilbert Jasper Engelbrecht  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Aug 1909 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA; died on 24 Apr 1995 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.
    5. 6. Winifred Engelbrecht  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Aug 1911 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA; died on 25 Aug 1997 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Dorothy Marie Engelbrecht Descendancy chart to this point (1.Gustave1) was born on 27 Dec 1902 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA; died on 31 May 1935 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: LX9W-HJH
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Memorial# 61657855

    [This letter is written by Gustave Engelbrecbt to his Englebrect relatives in Missouri giving the details of the loss of his son Orville’s (spelled Orvel in the letter) wife and daughter in the Republic River Flood of May 31, 1935.]
    Oxford, Nebraska
    June 3, 1935

    Dear Loved Ones:

    Now that the rescue work is over I feel I should let you know more definite about the terrible flood we had here in the Republican Valley. The worst in the history of Nebraska. It his us all pretty bad but Dorothy and her family were some of those most severely hit.
    The water came so fast that one couldn’t run out of the way of it, and it was midnight when the volley came and people were at sleep and the night was pitch dark and was raining some. When Dorothy and Orvel awoke, the water as coming into the house, they had no time to dress. Orvel waded through the water to get an axe and chop a hole in the roof; and all climbed to the roof when they got there the house swept away with them, going at a fast speed down the valley towards the river. In a little while the house hit something and went to pieces, and they went on with part of the roof. Soon they hit a tree at the river and were thrown into the river.
    Orvel is a good swimmer, he took the little boy 2 years old in one arm and swam with the other arm. He told Dorothy to hang on to him she grabbed his suspenders and that way he swam with them. Poor Willis Lou had already gotten away from them. Soon they got on some floating pieces of something and held to that till they were wiped off that. Then he had to swim again and soon they got to something else to cling to but that soon got away from them and had to swim again. Somehow Dorothy must have hit something and lost her hold on him and sank. He saw her come up twice and hollered at her with all his might but she did not answer any more and sank again when he never saw her any more. In the excitement the boy dropped away from him he grabbed for him and happened to catch him by the arm, thanks to God, otherwise he would have been gone too. Being much discouraged after losing the girl 6 years old and finally Dorothy too, after swimming a mile and a half, but for the sake of the little boy he thought he
    Lucky he soon got to safety with the boy on a small, very small sandy island, soon after Dorothy let loose of him. If she had held on for about 20 feet more she would have been saved, but at the time they did not know that for it was too dark to see anything. They got to this island at about one o’clock at night and it was pretty cold and the little fellow had nothing on anymore, his shirt was all torn off and was quite bruised. Here he had to spend 36 hours before he was rescued.
    The little fellow got so cold that he turned blue. Orvel took his overalls off and wrapped them around the boy and pressed him close to him. In the morning, Saturday, the sky was clear and the sun came out warm. But let me tell you Providence played its part here, God sure helped that little fellow. Orvel saw a little mattress floating on the water close to the shore he caught it and it was the boy’s own little mattress out of his little bed.
    Orvel cut it open and dried it. Soon came a pillow along with an extra pillow case on it. Orvel put part of the feathers in the mattress and put the other pillowcase on him cutting a hole in the top for his head and a hole on each side for his arms and then put him in the mattress when he had that done the boy looked at his dad and smiled, that done him so well that he thought his efforts were well rewarded. In all this while the boy did not cry.

    Orvel was so badly grieved over the loss of Dorothy and Willis Lou that he cried out loud for a long time. His little boy says to him, “Daddy shut up”.

    36 hours is a long time for a little boy to do without food or water so he insisted on having some of that dirty floodwater. God helped him and soon came a cup floating along Orvel caught it and filled it with that water and left it settle until the dirt was all on the bottom then he drank the water off. Then he says, “Daddy lets call Mamma to make us some thing to eat. Orvel explained to him that mamma got lost in the water and would never come back. The little fellow must have understood that he never called for mamma again.

    Not far away on another island Orvel saw a house he thought to swim over there with the boy, put him in the little pillow case and tied him on his back but the little fellow cried so bad that he had to abandon the scheme. Stayed till next morning, Sunday. Then he could wade it across to the house. The people that lived there had left everything and fled, but there was food and water in the house, so Orvel fixed a meal and it is needless to say the boy ate heartily and smiled.

    At eleven o’clock a boat came along and saw them and brought them in. Today they are both doing well, only Orvel is horrible sun—burned and the boy is very sore. This is just one story of many similar ones. Many people were rescued from trees and housetops. Several of the rescuing party were drowned. Well I guess I must relate a little of our own experience. Since we all got out alive I did not think it so important though our loss is something like $3,000.00 We did not think the water would ever come as high as we live.

    So we stayed in the house and went to bed at 11:30 a neighbor called for help the water was running in the basement. We got up and dressed in a hurry, and when we went out the water came into our yard already. We ran to see what could rescue from the basement but could do nothing the water was already running in and in a little while a minute or two the water stood a foot deep on the floor. We saw we had to flee but there too the water was so deep and too swift and none of us could swim. So we crawled outthe north window and got on the windmill tower and around the side of the tower we hung till next morning about eight o’clock, then the neighbors from the highland came and got us with horses. The water had dropped two feet or more already. This was Friday night.

    Now, Monday, we have 15 men working to clean the dirt out of the house and barn. We had 2 feet of mud in the house when the water went down. Everything in the house was full of mud. All fences, hay lumber, posts and everything that would swim went away, some of the smaller buildings went too others were moved just some distance and were hung up. All spring chickens drowned. The bigger ones and old hens were roosting high and stayed. From 40 hogs have ten left, cattle were all gone but 4 but Saturday we heard where there were 5 more. The wheat oats are ruined and grain in the bin is full of mud, have not even got seed corn left. We had no corn planted yet in the bottom. It will probably be a few weeks before we can live on the place.

    At Orville Fuchs’s place the old folks lived in a big 2 story house and had 8 occupants at the time. It swept away and all got drowned but 3. They clung to a tree. Every building on the place and everything else is gone. Orville hasn’t got anything anymore but he proved himself a brave man and a great hero and if Dorothy had just hung on to him a little bit longer he would have saved her too, but neither one knew that they were so near at safety. Nearly every house in low bottom is gone and many people are drowned. They have so far recovered 3 bodies. Dorothy and Willis Lou we have not found yet. We will search again tomorrow and pray that we may find them. We would feel so much better if we could find them.

    Now Amanda will you please let Joe and Obergs read this letter for I just haven’t the time to write to every body and then send it to Bill and to Sister Emma. I would like so much to write to everyone but I just can’t find time we have so terrible much todo. Dear loved ones please forgive me, I am just all concerned in finding back my dear daughter and granddaughter meanwhile we will trust and pray and cast our burdens upon him who said, “Call upon me in the days of trouble and I will deliver thee I willwrite again as soon as I can. Wife is bearing up good and so are the rest, with the help of God.

    Your loving ones,
    Tena and I and the rest of the family

    Note: After talking with Winnifred Watson I found out that the wife’s body was never recovered after the flood. Willis Lou’s body was found by a farmer who was tending to his fields and saw her little arm sticking up out of the ground where the floodwaters had receded.


    Buried:
    body not recovered from flood, There is a marker in Oxford Cemetery

    Dorothy married Orville C. Fuchs on 25 Nov 1926. Orville was born on 12 Feb 1897; died on 24 Jun 1971; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Willis Lu Fuchs  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Jan 1928; died on 31 May 1935 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.
    2. 8. Howard C. Fuchs  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 31 Aug 1932 in , Furnas County, Nebraska, USA; died on 03 Oct 2012 in Arapahoe, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

  2. 3.  George Benjamin Engelbrecht Descendancy chart to this point (1.Gustave1) was born on 05 Jun 1904 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: G9WH-H3C
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    George married Letha Ahrandts on 13 Jul 1931. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Beverlee Engelbrecht  Descendancy chart to this point

  3. 4.  Agnes Wilhelmina Engelbrecht Descendancy chart to this point (1.Gustave1) was born on 08 Feb 1908; died on 28 Dec 1966; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: G94Y-WCQ
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Memorial# 61658040

    Agnes married Gilbert Wengert on 13 Jun 1936. Gilbert (son of Jacob Wengert and Cora Mae Hostetter) was born on 27 Jun 1911; died on 19 Sep 1959; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. Allen C. Wengert  Descendancy chart to this point

  4. 5.  Gilbert Jasper Engelbrecht Descendancy chart to this point (1.Gustave1) was born on 21 Aug 1909 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA; died on 24 Apr 1995 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: LKRN-66R
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Memorial# 35945225

    Per Howard J Fuchs:
    Gilbert and Anna farmed his parent's (Gustav and Florentina) home place after Gustav and Tina retired and moved to Oxford. Gilbert and Anna had several years together until Ann passed away 2 days after Gib's mother on Oct. 28, 1953.

    Gilbert married Anna Cowan on 12 Sep 1946. Anna was born in 1910; died on 30 Oct 1953 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 6.  Winifred Engelbrecht Descendancy chart to this point (1.Gustave1) was born on 08 Aug 1911 in , Franklin County, Nebraska, USA; died on 25 Aug 1997 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: 94TX-2NP
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Memorial# 68152955

    Family/Spouse: Harold Alfred Watson. Harold was born on 12 Mar 1907; died on 12 Sep 1954; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 11. Doyle Watson  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 12. Ina Watson  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 13. Karen Watson  Descendancy chart to this point died in N.


Generation: 3

  1. 7.  Willis Lu Fuchs Descendancy chart to this point (2.Dorothy2, 1.Gustave1) was born on 23 Jan 1928; died on 31 May 1935 in Oxford, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: LKRN-6PX
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Memorial# 61657858

    died along with daughter Willis Lu in 1935 flood

    Buried:
    body not recovered from flood, There is a marker in Oxford Cemetery


  2. 8.  Howard C. Fuchs Descendancy chart to this point (2.Dorothy2, 1.Gustave1) was born on 31 Aug 1932 in , Furnas County, Nebraska, USA; died on 03 Oct 2012 in Arapahoe, Furnas County, Nebraska, United States; was buried in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Harlan County, Nebraska, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: LKRN-6RY
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Memorial# 98251114

    Howard J. Fuchs, age 80, of Arapahoe, Nebraska formerly of Oxford, Nebraska died on Wednesday, October 3, 2012 at the C.A. Mues Good Samaritan Center in Arapahoe, Nebraska.

    He was born on August 31, 1932 in Furnas County, Nebraska to Orville C. & Dorothy M. (Engelbrecht) Fuchs.

    Howard was a survivor of the 1935 Republican River Flood, but many of his family perished in the flood. Including his Mother, Sister Willis Lu, Grandmother Martha Fuchs, Aunts Virginia Blauvelt & Leona Anderson. He attended Buffalo Country School thru 8thgrade, and then graduated from Oxford High School with the Class of 1950. He attended Hastings Beauty Academy in 1951-52 and the Omaha School of Barbers in 1952. He was drafted into service in 1953 and served 16 months in Korea before being honorably discharged. He started Howard's Barber Shop in 1958 and worked there until the early 1970's. He then worked for the Village of Oxford as a power plant operator from 1974 to 1994. He would also work part time as an advertising salesman for the Times Tribune newspaper of Beaver City, Nebraska. In 2005, he moved to the CA Mues Good Samaritan Center in Arapahoe, Nebraska. He enjoyed and was very proud of his nieces and nephews musical programs. He enjoyed traveling and was proud to have been in all 50 states.

    He was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Oxford and later Arapahoe, Nebraska, a Weblo Scout Master for 6 years, a member of the American Legion Post #219 & VFW of Oxford, and a 50 year member of the Masonic Lodge #183 of Arapahoe, a member of the Tehama Shrine Band and the Maverick Band.

    He is preceded in death by his parents, Brother Roy "Skipper" Fuchs, Sister Willis Lu Fuchs.

    He is survived by his sister Gail Shafer of Sterling, Colorado; Sister-In-Law: Rita Fuchs of Oxford, Nebraska and nieces and nephews

    Memorial services will be Monday, October 8, 2012 at 10:30 AM at First United Methodist Church, in Arapahoe, Nebraska with Pastor George Probasco, officiating. Inurnment will be at a later date. Wenburg Funeral Home, of Arapahoe, Nebraska is in charge of the arrangements.


  3. 9.  Beverlee Engelbrecht Descendancy chart to this point (3.George2, 1.Gustave1)

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    lived in York, Nebraska


  4. 10.  Allen C. Wengert Descendancy chart to this point (4.Agnes2, 1.Gustave1)

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Adopted: Adopted
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Notes:

    They farmed in the Franklin


  5. 11.  Doyle Watson Descendancy chart to this point (6.Winifred2, 1.Gustave1)

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: GSN3-ZVJ
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015


  6. 12.  Ina Watson Descendancy chart to this point (6.Winifred2, 1.Gustave1)

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • familyserch.org ID: 94TX-2XD
    • Created: 28 Jun 2015


  7. 13.  Karen Watson Descendancy chart to this point (6.Winifred2, 1.Gustave1) died in N.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Created: 28 Jun 2015

    Family/Spouse: Harold Johnson. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Sharon Johnson  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Sharon Johnson Descendancy chart to this point (13.Karen3, 6.Winifred2, 1.Gustave1)

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Created: 28 Jun 2015




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